A DIY INDIEPOP VINYL & CASSETTE LABEL
Back to All Events

Steven Adams + Emma Tricca

  • The Lexington Pentonville Road, London N1 9JB UK (map)

A national musical treasure" The Guardian

Steven Adams, formerly of The Broken Family Band, releases new album DROPS on Fika Recordings in November 2023 - and will be showcasing the new record at The Lexington with an all-too-rare full band show.

DROPS is a sonically compelling piece of work: from bleak/exultant opener Out to Sea and the motorik Living in the Local Void to the weirdly funereal Fascists (where Adams imagines the "little skip in our steps" that we'll have upon outliving some baddies), and Day Trip's psychedelia in miniature. There are also moments of tenderness: the avalanche of empathy on closing track Cheap Wine Sad Face, and I Tried to Keep it Light's "worse things could happen" I don't know how, but give me time".

Adams says: "I'm preoccupied by the passing of time and the way it affects how we feel. This record is about time and bewilderment and trying to make sense of things".

Since calling time on TBFB at the height of their success, Adams has released half a dozen albums under various names (Singing Adams, Steven James Adams, Steven Adams & The French Drops), his witty, incisive lyrics and melodic sensibilities taking in DIY indie rock, folky introspection, and off-kilter pop hooks.

Support comes from Emma Tricca.

"It felt like I was driving through tunnels," Emma Tricca says of her fourth album - her first for Bella Union. A phosphorescent panorama of undulating colour, shape and sound.

As with any transformation, it is this sense of movement that underpins Aspirin Sun and its bold new form, ebbing and flowing, continually unfurling. The tunnels led the Italian-born, London-based singer-songwriter towards something expansive and far-reaching: an entirely new and experimental collection of songs. But they also drew her closer to her late father, and her memories of him driving them both in his small white Fiat, darting through the Alps and whizzing through darkened passageways, where shafts of light flickered ahead of them in the distance.